ron2
Posted : 2/9/2011 10:41:55 AM
Kevin, you stated some posts earlier that the police dog sees the felon as a big hunk of meat. That's wrong. A little familiarity with police dog work and training would let the casual reader know that the K-9 does not chase the felon as a prey item to eat. He chases because he is commanded to, and then releases because he is commanded to, because listening to his handler is the most rewarding thing. Might the herding behavior of a dog be linked to prey drive, such as a wolf pack running and cutting the herd of ungulates? Maybe so. But there are dynamics in police dog work that I think were glossed over or neglected when you made that statement. Police dog work is about a relationship between the dog and handler, not the dog and prey. And when the dog does latch onto the suspect, he does not proceed to eat the suspect. He bites only enough to hold and any punctures are accidental, usually caused by the suspect struggling. And the only reason the dog bites the suspect is because he has been trained to do so in specific pursuit circumstances, and then releases upon the handler's command.
I think this is markedly different from viewing the suspect as dinner. Dog has evolved. And no one has prove that dogs do not think, just as they have not proven the humans do think, Descarte notwithstanding. Without a common language, how would we know what each other is thinking. Many moons ago, I detailed the precise cues my dog would give when he wanted to go outside. It was a repeated set, in a precise order. Sign language, if you will. And we had an understanding. Underneath is the need to go potty. Over that is the knowledge that peeing in the house is not preferred. In addition, get the human to let me outside. Granted, I used human phrasing to describe that, but it does not take away from the physical reality of the exchange. My dog let me know what he was thinking.
In addition, it was mentioned earlier about dogs that can perform at trials in spite of the presence of other dogs in heat. Why? Because the dog is concentrating on work. The dog has prioritized. Work now, procreate later. If a dog was not able to think and process, we couldn't train them and we certainly couldn't see them engaging in free shaping.